Quantitative characterization of intrinsic and artificial defects in ferromagnetic structures is critical to future magnetic storage based on vortices or domain walls moving through nanostructured devices. Using torsional magnetometry, we observe finite size modifications to the Barkhausen effect in the limiting case of a single vortex core interacting with individual pointlike pinning sites in a magnetic thin film. The Barkhausen effect in this limit becomes a quantitative two-dimensional nanoscale probe of local energetics in the film. Tailoring the pinning potential using single-point focused ion beam implantation demonstrates control of the effect and points the way to integrated magneto-mechanical devices incorporating quantum pinning effects.
Thin films with microstructures controlled on a nanometer scale have been fabricated using a recently developed process called glancing angle deposition (GLAD) which combines oblique angle evaporation with controlled substrate motion. Critical to the production of GLAD thin films is the requirement for a narrow angular flux distribution centered at an oblique incidence angle. We report here recent work with low-pressure, long-throw sputter deposition with which we have succeeded in fabricating porous titanium thin films possessing “zig-zag,” helical, and “pillar” microstructures, demonstrating microstructural control on a level consistent with evaporated GLAD. The use of sputtering for GLAD simplifies process control and should enable deposition of a broader range of thin film materials.
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